Āhnika-Dharma: Dawn Purification, Sandhyā-Upāsanā, Tarpana, Pañca-Mahāyajñas, and Aśauca Rules
अशक्तावशिरस्कं तु स्नानमस्य विधीयते / आर्द्रेण वाससा वापि मार्जनं कायिकं स्मृतम्
aśaktāvaśiraskaṃ tu snānamasya vidhīyate / ārdreṇa vāsasā vāpi mārjanaṃ kāyikaṃ smṛtam
ومن عجز عن الاغتسال الكامل شُرِع له غسلٌ جزئيّ «غير شامل للرأس». أو يُعَدّ مسحُ الجسد بثوبٍ مبلّل أيضًا تطهيرًا بدنيًّا.
Lord Viṣṇu (in instruction to Garuḍa/Vinatā-putra)
Concept: Anukalpa (substitute observance): partial bath or wet-cloth wiping counts as bodily purification when one is unable.
Vedantic Theme: Intent and feasibility (adhikāra) matter; disciplined purity is upheld without cruelty to the body.
Application: When ill, disabled, traveling, or water-limited, perform partial wash (head/face/hands/feet) or wet-cloth wipe with mantra/intent of śauca.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Type: gṛha (domestic)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.50.7 (snāna prerequisite); Garuda Purana 1.50.9-10 (formal types of snāna)
This verse emphasizes that physical purity is required for rites, but the tradition also allows compassionate alternatives when a person cannot perform a full bath.
Indirectly: it supports the correct performance of prescribed rites and purity practices that accompany death-related observances, which the Garuda Purana links to orderly transition and dharmic conduct.
If someone is ill, elderly, or otherwise unable to bathe, a simplified cleansing—such as wiping with a clean wet cloth—can be used to maintain ritual cleanliness without causing harm.